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l examiner leads in circulation ft the daily and sunday examiner in october sold more papers in the city of Chicago than any other two morning papers with several w thousand to spare circulation books open to the inspection of any advertiser vol xl no 288 a m Chicago examiner saturday Chicago november 22 1913 saturday Chicago and vicinity fair saturday and probably sunday some what lower temperature moderate to brisk northwesterly winds range of temperatures yesterday highest 7 lowest 62 average 87 reiittered in u 8 patent office price one cent gft-rf a stt kuhn-loeb backing seen for subway in Chicago eastern syndicate asks commis sioner maltbie to inspect com prehensive plan with pros pect of - bidding on project mayor harrison's proposition for city-wide tube attracts cap ital and an investigation is to be made by experts new tork xov 21 milo r malt bie of the public service commission has been asked by a new york syndicate to natch the development of the compre hensive subway plan in Chicago on the advisability of making a bid under the twenty-year reversion of property plan to the city it was commissioner malt bie who devised a plan whereby the in terborough would get back 45,000,000 of its expenditures for the construction of the new subway bystem here in twelve years and it is hoped to find expression for a similar plan in Chicago in an interview to-day he declared that lip was unable to speak fully of his own 1 decision and plans regarding the invita j tion of the xew york syndicate but any i reluctance he might have owned in mak ' lag ihe announcement had been dissl i i!ed by the enthusiastic reports fur i lished him by several members of the local transportation committee concern ing the Chicago examiner's splendid cam taign with mayor harrison to expedite inpnijcusite subway plan for cai considering proposition j am at present considering the re iiuest said mr maltbie it wolud ne cessitate a trip to Chicago â€” temporary residence perhaps â€” to make a study of local conditions traffic political and otherwise during the development of the subway situation there before i would feel in a position to give information to kxew york syndicate on the advlsabil of bidding on a twenty-year reversion plan and lam a pretty busy man no lt would hardly be fair for me to say jest who the prospective bidders on a Chicago subway are at least not until i have given them my own answer if i take up this thins it will not be as an expert mind but for the study of sociological conditions which surround subway building the things that really maie a subway pay rt is understood that the syndicate ln jstion is kuhu loeb & co and that they make a hid on a Chicago plan will be seconded by j p morgan & co both of whom held major positions il the financing of the manhattan sub ray systems whatever happened mr laltbie said regarding his own decision le new york firms would send an ob srver to Chicago to watch the develop lent of a comprehensive subway plan osition would be unique mr maltbie's friends on receipts of be news declared that his position as n observer for a new york syndicate rould be rather unique as he has fath red several plans for a city-built city owner city-controlled and if necessary city-operated subway system his work as commissioner of public service has been in defense of municipal interests in subway building especially in short term franchises ending in municpal control a majority of the local transportation committee considered mr maltbie's an nouncement of a prospective bid with the liveliest enthusiasm several dis cussed plans to simplify the twenty j h marble stricken at coal hearing dead interstate commerce commissioner succumbs to illness washington nov 21 john hobart marble interstate commerce commission er died suddenly at his home here to night of uraemic poisoning mr marble was stricken during the anthracite coal investigation in philadelphia on thursday he is survived by a wife and a nine teen-year-old daughter mr marble was special attorney for the senate commit tee in the second investigation into the election of william lorimer to the sen ate he was born in ashland neb february 26 1569 bulgarian king is expected to abdicate crown prince boris flees from the capital special cable to the examiner london nov 21 the correspondent of the daily mail in vienna telegraphs i have received information from an important diplomatic source that the abdi cation of king ferdinand of bulgaria is expected immediately telegrams from sofia state that great excitement has been caused in bulgaria because crown prince boris has left the capital and is believed to have fled the country owing to the receipt of threaten ing letters another report is that he has gone to a sanitarium in hungary because of ill health strike in german state church spreads 3,500 members have resigned in berlin alone special cable to the examiner berlin nov 21 â€” as a result of the growing agitation of the non-sectarian league composed of socialists free thinkers and atheists the strike against the state church is reaching large pro portions more than 5,500 persons quit the church in berlin yesterday and to day it is estimated 35,000 members have left the church in berlin alone the empress is said to be keenly dis tressed plot of chinese rebels revealed six arrested in attempt to over throw government special cable io the examiner london nov 21 another plot to overthrow the pekin government is de scribed by the shanghai correspondent of the daily telegraph six plotters have been arrested and documents found on them show that the revolutionists had been promised the assistance of govern ment troops stationed at the shanghai nanking hankow kiangyin and wu sung forts munsey takes over u.s trust company publisher guarantees all outstand ing obligations and liabilities washington nov 21.â€”representa tives of frank a munsey publisher and banker announced late last night that the munsey interests had absorbed the united states trust company of this city guaranteeing all outstanding obli gations and liabilities during the day the trust company had been subjected to a run of depositors following rumors in local banking circles regarding the oank'g credit kaiser has chill must stay indoors special cable to the examiner berlin nor 21 the report that the kaiser is seriously ill is denied on high authority the akiser suffered from a slight chill contracted during his inspec tion of the fleet at kiel his physicians have advised him to cancel all out-of-door engagements for the next week dunning guard beats man to death 4 held conflicting stories told by at tendants on duty at time of attack victim was a paralytic three of suspects accuse an other patient found uncon scious by nurse charles hoenicke 318 west one hun dred and sixteenth street a paralytic inmate of the hospital ward at the dun ning institution died early yesterday morning as the result of a terrific beat ing received from a guard late yesterday afternoon superintend ent george leinlger of the institution after questioning each attendant asked lieutenant samuel collins of the irving park police station to hold george san dusky frank parduhn rudolph schii hauser and jacob miller four of the guards who were left in charge of hoe nlcke when miss katherine borhun the head nurse left the hospital for her din ner hour thursday evening the four men were locked in separnte cells and questioned individually by lieu tenant collins the questiouing brought out two stories of the beating of the in valid differing only in who did the ac tual slugging which brought about hoe nicke's death one guard accuses another sandusky who was senior guard of the quartet having been at the institution nearly seven months denied that he had personally had anything to do with the beating of hoenicke he blamed jacob miller and said that the latter had hit hoenicke repeatedly and thrown him on the floor miller parduhn and schilhauser sep arately told the police officer that san dusky did the beating . - - we four were left alone in the ward when the nurse went to dinner thursday afternoon at 5:30 o'clock miller said the old fellow hoenicke would not stay in bed twice we took him and put him back the third time sandusky said to the rest of us i'm the old guard here i'll show you fellows how we treat tbese people we three-schilhauser parduhn ana myself-bave been at the place only a month and so we stood back to let the experienced man show us what to do sandusky first hit hoenicke with his fist knocking him down then he kicked him as he lay on the floor the old fellow wo unconscious by this time and san dnsky picked him up and threw his body bleeding and limp back on the bed " that's the way to do it he said new men were frightened we three new men felt pretty scared at the way hoenicke lay there groaning and when the nurse returned we got out of sight right away but when mr lein iger the superintendent called us in one at a time and questioned us why there was nothing left but for us to tell lust what had happened schilhanser and parduhn corroborated the story of miller hoenicke had been at the dunning in stitution only five days when he was beaten to death when miss borhun found him his hair was disordered his head covered with blood from a cut over the eye and his throat showing the plain marks of choking fingers and his clothe half torn from his body she at once sent for physicians to aid him but he died eight hours later without ever re gaining consciousness late last night the four men were moved from the irving park station and taken to the shakespeare avenue station where they were confined in separate cells this morning at 10 o'clock they will have to testify before the coroner's jury boy preacher held on mail theft charge carrixgton n d nov 21.â€”an field shiflet known as the boy preach er who won notice several years ago by his occupancy of numerous pulpits was arrested to-day by united states marshal shea charged with robbing the united states mail shuiet now a rural mail carrier out of carrlngtou is ac cused of stealing about seventy-five pounds of mail that was found secreted in a gravel pit near this city talk from germany to u s on wireless special cable to the examiner berlin nov 21 the claim is made in a report to the german shipbuilding society by rear admiral g a emsmann that wireless telephonic communication has been established between neudstadt am-buebenberge iu hanover and new jersey a spoken message was trans mitted and distinctly received he says october 27 the distance between these two points is approximately 4,000 miles judge e.h.gary buys 100,000 painting head of u s steel gets gainsbor ough's the market cart special cable to the examiner paris nov 21 1t has just become known that gainsborough's famous paint ing the market cart is now in the collection of judge elbert h gary chair man of the board of directors of the united states steel corporation it was sold at christie's in london early this year to agnew's for 100,000 the price judge gary paid is not revealed stabbed in fencing match feared dying fritz fichtner wounded when but ton comes off opponent's foil fritz fichtner 1259 victor avenue a prominent member of the german turn verein in north clark street near chi cago avenue was said to be dying last night in the german hospital from a sword thrust that had punctured his right lung causing an internal hemorrhage gustav berkes manager of turner hall said last night that the wound was inflicted accidentally on thursday night during fencing practice by henry geilen of 1437 well street teacher of manual training in the lane techical high school berkes said the button came off geilen's foil just as he made a thrust which fichtner failed to parry geilen himself refused to be seen last night at his home the police are investi gating zimmerman's hello friend shows checks woman sued by banker declares he was infatuated with her new haven conn nov 21 checks amounting to several thousand dollars including transfer papers for a house which she claims he had given her were introduced in court to-day by mrs lillian wray formerly telephone operator who is being sued by martin zimmerman of nerr york a banker and uncle of the duchess of manchester who declares the money was a loan mrs wray declared that zimmerman who sne says had be come infatuated with her told her he would make his little hello friend in dependently rich paris clock beats heard in washington radio signals flashed across the atlantic washington nov 21 three weeks of patient experimenting culminated in success to-night when the united states naval observatory here heard the beats of the paris observatory clock as transmitted by radio signals from the eiffel tower to the great navy radio station at arlington the beats were compared with those of the washington clock for some minutes by the method of coincidences ballington booth balks reconciliation brother bramwell gets no answer to his letter new tork nov 21 reconciliation of general bramwell booth head of the salvation army and geueral ballington booth of the volunteers of america is uo nearer than before the former took a first step no acknowledgment came to general bramwell booth to-day from his brother the overture was with regard to the union of the two forces armours lose trade because of tariff washington nov 21 â€” protest against the loss of trade caused by the application of the new tariff bill was made to-day by attorney ralph crews of Chicago representing the armour packing company to the foreign trade advisers of the state department it was said the big packing company is suffering a heavy loss in export trade by reason of steps taken by several coun tries to shut out american meat on the ground that the duties provided in the new tariff bill show discrimination against certain of their products rees gets job where wife can go along washington nov 21 thomas ltees editor and owner of the springfield 111 register and former state senator was to-day appointed commissioner general to the countries bordering the mediterra nean in behalf of the panama exposi tion about a month ago mr rees was offered a similar assignment to south america but declined because the party was going on a war vessel and mrs rees could not accompany him mrs rees can go with him ou his mediterranean trip _._.__... hanish on trial to tell cure of violets prince of sun cult sits motion less in court for three hours while his lawyers battle over the acceptances of jurors high priest in high-priced book advises eating flowers and dew-drinking as cure for ills he has numerous titles by richard henry little prince otoman zar-adusht hanish high priest of the mazdaznan cult worshipers of the sun sat in a gloomy courtroom all day yesterday and watched the se lection of a jury that is going to try him ou the charge of sending obscene litera ture by express in violation of the inter state commerce laws prince otoman also styled the little master of the world and the prince of peace was accompanied by two or three of his followers many more spec tators including a half dozen women sat patiently in the courtroom all day the trial is being held before federal judge mack in the federal building no jurors were seeuried yesterday al though the government accepted twelve veniremen tentatively and tendered them to the defense which had not finished with the examination of the twelve when court adjourned spectators are curious prince otoman zar-adusht hanish sat like a rock all day although every eye in the courtroom was constantly upon him people came to the door tiptoed in whispered inquiries of their neighbors as to which of the men seated in the front of the room was hanish and then after feasting their eyes on the high priest of the sun worshipers departed hanish is not at all startling in ap pearance he looks like a man of about forty with a good head and an interest ing ut not unusual face he might be taken by one who did not know any thing about mazdaznan as a preac-cr or a lawyer or a book agent or an under taker he looks about forty although he says he is seventy it will be hard to make a woman believe that a person who seems to be about forty would wish to pass himself off as seventy many are worshipers but ah there is where the sun comes in and eating violets and dining on boiled dew many people believe in mazdaznan and gather behind hanish in his temple in lake park avenue and bow themselves to the floor and chant a weird refrain as the first rays of the sun peep mysteriously into the eastern windows merely because they want to look forty when they get to be seventy years old i don't blame them when pm seventy i would like to look forty myself or even twenty it's a wish the human heart has had since i-e first one ever beat hanish sits in the courtroom a rather handsome well-made man with a frame like that of an athlete and bearing every sign of a good sturdy health he ap parently doesn't know what it means to bave nerves he has what most of us lack very sadly power of concentration and control he can sit and regard the veniremen in the jury box for three hours at a stretch and not move once in all that time he doesn't even move his hands and he literally doesn't bat an es*e winker no matter what happens eats violets for age hanish says he gets his youthful looks his athletic appearance his interesting countenance and his perfect self-control through worshiping the sun and eat ing violets and early morning dew just how much can be brought forward at the trial of hanish of the weird rites and customs of mazdaznan is uncertain the government detectives made a care ful study of hanish and his cult for months before they arrested him the government is able to produce witnesses who can describe all the customs of the temple at lake avenue and has in its possession a great many of the books which hanish wrote and gave to his fol lowers â€” for a healthy cash consideration it is charged inner study the book which the gov ernment claims comes under the classi fication of obscene literature was sold to the adoring disciples of prince hanish for the modest price of 10 it is a book no bigger than one of george barr novels so there must he a comfortable profit in the transaction among other books now in the hands ot the government written by hanish is one dealing with the preservation of the health through simple means prince diary tells girl thief's life bares struggle to be good pitfalls laid for her ruin child writes of woman trying to make her become a white slave teils how she resisted but was led to steal by evil c o m p a n ions the diary of the girl who never had a chance is the heart story of thou sands of girls who come as innocent children to this country and have to maie their own way the story of my life as scrawled across the pages of an old blank book by hattle chabow ska now locked np as a thief narrates how she came here when she was four teen years old and how she had to work for her living of the temptations that be s e t he r â€” pitfalls that are set for every unsophisticated girl who has to reveals fight with men in auto who sought to lead her into evil escorts polite and she be lieved them kind until attacked shift for herself â€” and of bad compan ions who taught her to steal it is an intensely human document and it will probably win for her the chance for which she craves when she is ar raigned in the ju venile court to-day mrs gertrude howe britton of the ju venile protective as sociation has prom ised to find a good tome for hattie if pudge plnckney will her over to the association here is the rough draft halting but true of the story of her life hattie chabowska the story of my life by hattie chabowska i was fourteen years of age when i started to work for joe brown stein the buttonhole maker irene my sister took me to that shop for which i thank her very much , i have got four sisters the oldest one twenty-four years is married four years her name is martha ' she has got one baby boy two . years the second is irene she is nineteen years old she had one baby and it is dead she is not married the third is me i am seventeen years old and my name is hattie the fourth is klara she is fourteen years old it is seven months since my mother is dead and my father has gone away from us and we haven't seen him for five months i was working steady with my sister irene irene was so good to me and oh i was a happy little girl i didn't care for any fel lows i was so bashful but now oh why did my mother die why did she leave me here and when she was dying why didn't she take me with her she left me here in this bad world she don't see how i must suffer she don't see my tears how i wish i could he in my mother's place moved when mother died when my mother died irene nj self and klara we took the furniture and moved on holt avenue irene's friend katy she is four years from the old country she came and asked irene to take her to board irene did not want to because she knew that she was a bad girl that was wednesday evening she came by us and told that the people she was boarding with chased her away and one fellow slapped her face irene didn't want to take her yet but i felt so sorry for katy i was crying and told irene that she should take her irene took her poor katie she didn't even have a shirt so next morning irene gave her a shirt and a clean waist and 10 cents carfare out with young men then oue evening she took me out and met nice gentlemen they said good evening and were so good and talked so nice and then they took us home and made a date on sun day when sunday came we ware supposed to be on the corner at 8 o'clock my little sister klara was playing on the street when a young man was passing by and klara recognized katy's friend he asked klara for katy and clara took him upstairs by us we were eating supper katy was so glad that he came and they de cided to go out it was 2 o'clock in the morning when i came home my sister was sore at me that i stayed so long i was supposed to meet him wednes day but katy wouldn't let me go and every time he came she hide so i wouldn't talk to him i didn't see him for three months katy used to take me to balls picnics and shows oh my sister was so sore at me and on katy that she made a bum out of me both lose jobs . then katy told me that i should quit my job and go to work with her i quit my work and she got fired from her place and we both didn't work for two weeks then we start ed in candy factories sne didn't like them and by corsets she didn't like so we started in laundries we ' were working a few weeks she was so mean to me and was lighting with me so we quit from there and irene found her work in restaurants and i was doing housework for irene that was the same thing like be fore and once we were in bad trouble me and katy were coming from a theater when two fellows were com ing in an automobile and katy snapped her fingers and they stop and ask us to take a ride i didu't want to go but katy pulled me in - then they take us to a wineroom and then again we were riding so long and we came to an aw ful dark street and oh i never will forget what the fat man asked me but i was crying . and was begging katy to take me away but she was only laughing slapped man's face i never was strong like that night i slipped his face as hard as i could and i said to katy that if she want ed to she could stay with them but i'll go home and tell everything to irene she got scared and we went oh we were running and they after us then there was a policeman standing so they turned in another street katy told me i should not say nothing to irene and i promised her now it's a month since i am away from her from my sister irene katy went to a hotel and was stopping there and then came another a regu lar sportlug girl she was married and her husband is a first-class thief she robbed her husband three times and run away from him and i didn't know nothing about lt i thought she is a good woman and she told me her husband chased her and is very mean to her and she took me to a wine room and there again i b,ad to suf fer she was trying the worst way to make a sport from me but she had a poor chance i was crying and jumped through the window and run away the next day irene was so sore at me she almost hit me then rosie told me i should go away from irene 1 didn't want to go be cause i was feeling sorry that i must part with my mother's furniture that was thursday evening i came from work p here the first diary ends after that there are fragmentary notes telling how the girl went into homes as a domestic and began to steal in order to deck her self iu pretty things how she never had a fair chance and how the sin of her deeds oppressed her until she momentarily feared capture and here again is a blank as the detect ives arrested her before she could finish the entry in her diary mexican armies rushing to battle constitutionalists push south to meet federals on their way north expect to clash be tween juarez and chihuahua u s warns mexicans in tam pico-tuxpam district to protect american lives and property is ready to land marines special cabla to the examiner mexico mex nov 21 the bank of london and mexico received a message to-night from general villa at juarez in which he threat ens to execute the bank employes captured at torreon and durango if the bank does not honor his drafts the drafts are still held up el paso tex nov 21 the federals are coming north and villas men are being rushed south to meet them as fast as trains can be made up just how far north the federal forces are cannot be lamed but it is believed they are ap proaching villa ahumada and that villa hopes to occupy the bills and fortify the passes through which the lexkan ceo tral runs at los medanos before the federals get there all gambling houses iu juarez ware closed early to-night and at 10 o'clock all americans were quietlv warned ut seek safety in flight to el paso ready to meet federals in juarez it is admitted by constitu tionalist officers that they have knowl edge of a movement of a fore of fed erals from chihuahua northward li exact location of this force is not known but it is believed to be about half way between chihuahua and juarez the re ports which reached juarez were to the effect that there were 6,000 men in the federal column the constitutionalists insist that they will be prepared to meet and stop the federals at los medanos which is lo cated forty-three miles south of juarez they already have 2,000 men in that vicinity watching for any sodden ap proach of the federals and will rush 4,000 or 5,000 men to the front to-night or as fast as trains can be gotten to gether and on the road a tax of 50,000 in mexican money will be levied on the merchants of juarez by the constitutionalists in order to pay the expenses of the army in its fight against the huerta government the tax will be levied proportionately so that any merchant will not be required to pay more than he can afford on a basis of receipts and stock carried rush troops to ei paso for the first time since the united states troops have been stationed at kl paso during the mexican troubles all commissioned officers are required to at tend officers roll calls each morning the strick order was put into effect yes terday orders have also been given to all com missioned officers here that an officer muct remain wlch the troops at all times subject to immediate calling out of tha troops when an officer is on duty ha cannot leave the section where his troop is located for a single moment general villa seems to have his troopa well in hand and under exceleuc discip line all catinas are closed and there is no drunkenness troop k of the thirteenth cavalry u s a which had been stationed at norla >'. m was ordered to kl paso 1 this afternoon to strengthen the garrison i at the smelter ou the river north of the i city other troops are also to be called i ln it is said at headquarters but tha â„¢ orders for the movements had not been issued at 6 o'clock last night gen aguilar tells u s he'll protect the oil interests washington nov 21 rear ad miral fletcher who is on board the bat tleship rhode island at vera crui trans mttted to the navy department to-night the following dispatch received from general aguilar commander of the rebel operating in the vicinity of tuxpam i am governing Â«'â€¢ a constitutions basis my attitude being to guarantee the interests of ail foreign and domestic oil corporations existing in the territory i occupy fulfilling in tats moaner the de continued on 2d page 6th column continued on 4th page 7th column last saturday before thanksgiving phis is one of the year's big buying and selling days the â– *â€¢ man and woman and child who would be well dressed for thanksgiving day will buy overcoats suits hats shoes haber dashery millinery cloaks waists and lingerie to-day thurs day will be thanksgiving there will be thousands of family dinner parties and every one present wants to look well dressed there will be evening parties where the properly dressed will stand out distinctively in 170,000 Chicago homes this morning out of our daily circulation of 240,366 the decision will be made at the family breakfast table conference where to do to-day's buying we want our readers to read our ad vertising columns closely this morning and to be guided thereby the store offerings have been made with a view of selling for the thanksgiving trade there is a fine array of store news for all read what the merchants are advertising examiner's net paid circulation as sworn to the u s government daily 240,366 sunday 528,328 the examiner service bureau will co-operate with prospective advertis ers in making illustrations preparing copy and laying out a special holiday campaign a phone message to the advertising manager main 50uo will bring an expert

l examiner leads in circulation ft the daily and sunday examiner in october sold more papers in the city of Chicago than any other two morning papers with several w thousand to spare circulation books open to the inspection of any advertiser vol xl no 288 a m Chicago examiner saturday Chicago november 22 1913 saturday Chicago and vicinity fair saturday and probably sunday some what lower temperature moderate to brisk northwesterly winds range of temperatures yesterday highest 7 lowest 62 average 87 reiittered in u 8 patent office price one cent gft-rf a stt kuhn-loeb backing seen for subway in Chicago eastern syndicate asks commis sioner maltbie to inspect com prehensive plan with pros pect of - bidding on project mayor harrison's proposition for city-wide tube attracts cap ital and an investigation is to be made by experts new tork xov 21 milo r malt bie of the public service commission has been asked by a new york syndicate to natch the development of the compre hensive subway plan in Chicago on the advisability of making a bid under the twenty-year reversion of property plan to the city it was commissioner malt bie who devised a plan whereby the in terborough would get back 45,000,000 of its expenditures for the construction of the new subway bystem here in twelve years and it is hoped to find expression for a similar plan in Chicago in an interview to-day he declared that lip was unable to speak fully of his own 1 decision and plans regarding the invita j tion of the xew york syndicate but any i reluctance he might have owned in mak ' lag ihe announcement had been dissl i i!ed by the enthusiastic reports fur i lished him by several members of the local transportation committee concern ing the Chicago examiner's splendid cam taign with mayor harrison to expedite inpnijcusite subway plan for cai considering proposition j am at present considering the re iiuest said mr maltbie it wolud ne cessitate a trip to Chicago â€” temporary residence perhaps â€” to make a study of local conditions traffic political and otherwise during the development of the subway situation there before i would feel in a position to give information to kxew york syndicate on the advlsabil of bidding on a twenty-year reversion plan and lam a pretty busy man no lt would hardly be fair for me to say jest who the prospective bidders on a Chicago subway are at least not until i have given them my own answer if i take up this thins it will not be as an expert mind but for the study of sociological conditions which surround subway building the things that really maie a subway pay rt is understood that the syndicate ln jstion is kuhu loeb & co and that they make a hid on a Chicago plan will be seconded by j p morgan & co both of whom held major positions il the financing of the manhattan sub ray systems whatever happened mr laltbie said regarding his own decision le new york firms would send an ob srver to Chicago to watch the develop lent of a comprehensive subway plan osition would be unique mr maltbie's friends on receipts of be news declared that his position as n observer for a new york syndicate rould be rather unique as he has fath red several plans for a city-built city owner city-controlled and if necessary city-operated subway system his work as commissioner of public service has been in defense of municipal interests in subway building especially in short term franchises ending in municpal control a majority of the local transportation committee considered mr maltbie's an nouncement of a prospective bid with the liveliest enthusiasm several dis cussed plans to simplify the twenty j h marble stricken at coal hearing dead interstate commerce commissioner succumbs to illness washington nov 21 john hobart marble interstate commerce commission er died suddenly at his home here to night of uraemic poisoning mr marble was stricken during the anthracite coal investigation in philadelphia on thursday he is survived by a wife and a nine teen-year-old daughter mr marble was special attorney for the senate commit tee in the second investigation into the election of william lorimer to the sen ate he was born in ashland neb february 26 1569 bulgarian king is expected to abdicate crown prince boris flees from the capital special cable to the examiner london nov 21 the correspondent of the daily mail in vienna telegraphs i have received information from an important diplomatic source that the abdi cation of king ferdinand of bulgaria is expected immediately telegrams from sofia state that great excitement has been caused in bulgaria because crown prince boris has left the capital and is believed to have fled the country owing to the receipt of threaten ing letters another report is that he has gone to a sanitarium in hungary because of ill health strike in german state church spreads 3,500 members have resigned in berlin alone special cable to the examiner berlin nov 21 â€” as a result of the growing agitation of the non-sectarian league composed of socialists free thinkers and atheists the strike against the state church is reaching large pro portions more than 5,500 persons quit the church in berlin yesterday and to day it is estimated 35,000 members have left the church in berlin alone the empress is said to be keenly dis tressed plot of chinese rebels revealed six arrested in attempt to over throw government special cable io the examiner london nov 21 another plot to overthrow the pekin government is de scribed by the shanghai correspondent of the daily telegraph six plotters have been arrested and documents found on them show that the revolutionists had been promised the assistance of govern ment troops stationed at the shanghai nanking hankow kiangyin and wu sung forts munsey takes over u.s trust company publisher guarantees all outstand ing obligations and liabilities washington nov 21.â€”representa tives of frank a munsey publisher and banker announced late last night that the munsey interests had absorbed the united states trust company of this city guaranteeing all outstanding obli gations and liabilities during the day the trust company had been subjected to a run of depositors following rumors in local banking circles regarding the oank'g credit kaiser has chill must stay indoors special cable to the examiner berlin nor 21 the report that the kaiser is seriously ill is denied on high authority the akiser suffered from a slight chill contracted during his inspec tion of the fleet at kiel his physicians have advised him to cancel all out-of-door engagements for the next week dunning guard beats man to death 4 held conflicting stories told by at tendants on duty at time of attack victim was a paralytic three of suspects accuse an other patient found uncon scious by nurse charles hoenicke 318 west one hun dred and sixteenth street a paralytic inmate of the hospital ward at the dun ning institution died early yesterday morning as the result of a terrific beat ing received from a guard late yesterday afternoon superintend ent george leinlger of the institution after questioning each attendant asked lieutenant samuel collins of the irving park police station to hold george san dusky frank parduhn rudolph schii hauser and jacob miller four of the guards who were left in charge of hoe nlcke when miss katherine borhun the head nurse left the hospital for her din ner hour thursday evening the four men were locked in separnte cells and questioned individually by lieu tenant collins the questiouing brought out two stories of the beating of the in valid differing only in who did the ac tual slugging which brought about hoe nicke's death one guard accuses another sandusky who was senior guard of the quartet having been at the institution nearly seven months denied that he had personally had anything to do with the beating of hoenicke he blamed jacob miller and said that the latter had hit hoenicke repeatedly and thrown him on the floor miller parduhn and schilhauser sep arately told the police officer that san dusky did the beating . - - we four were left alone in the ward when the nurse went to dinner thursday afternoon at 5:30 o'clock miller said the old fellow hoenicke would not stay in bed twice we took him and put him back the third time sandusky said to the rest of us i'm the old guard here i'll show you fellows how we treat tbese people we three-schilhauser parduhn ana myself-bave been at the place only a month and so we stood back to let the experienced man show us what to do sandusky first hit hoenicke with his fist knocking him down then he kicked him as he lay on the floor the old fellow wo unconscious by this time and san dnsky picked him up and threw his body bleeding and limp back on the bed " that's the way to do it he said new men were frightened we three new men felt pretty scared at the way hoenicke lay there groaning and when the nurse returned we got out of sight right away but when mr lein iger the superintendent called us in one at a time and questioned us why there was nothing left but for us to tell lust what had happened schilhanser and parduhn corroborated the story of miller hoenicke had been at the dunning in stitution only five days when he was beaten to death when miss borhun found him his hair was disordered his head covered with blood from a cut over the eye and his throat showing the plain marks of choking fingers and his clothe half torn from his body she at once sent for physicians to aid him but he died eight hours later without ever re gaining consciousness late last night the four men were moved from the irving park station and taken to the shakespeare avenue station where they were confined in separate cells this morning at 10 o'clock they will have to testify before the coroner's jury boy preacher held on mail theft charge carrixgton n d nov 21.â€”an field shiflet known as the boy preach er who won notice several years ago by his occupancy of numerous pulpits was arrested to-day by united states marshal shea charged with robbing the united states mail shuiet now a rural mail carrier out of carrlngtou is ac cused of stealing about seventy-five pounds of mail that was found secreted in a gravel pit near this city talk from germany to u s on wireless special cable to the examiner berlin nov 21 the claim is made in a report to the german shipbuilding society by rear admiral g a emsmann that wireless telephonic communication has been established between neudstadt am-buebenberge iu hanover and new jersey a spoken message was trans mitted and distinctly received he says october 27 the distance between these two points is approximately 4,000 miles judge e.h.gary buys 100,000 painting head of u s steel gets gainsbor ough's the market cart special cable to the examiner paris nov 21 1t has just become known that gainsborough's famous paint ing the market cart is now in the collection of judge elbert h gary chair man of the board of directors of the united states steel corporation it was sold at christie's in london early this year to agnew's for 100,000 the price judge gary paid is not revealed stabbed in fencing match feared dying fritz fichtner wounded when but ton comes off opponent's foil fritz fichtner 1259 victor avenue a prominent member of the german turn verein in north clark street near chi cago avenue was said to be dying last night in the german hospital from a sword thrust that had punctured his right lung causing an internal hemorrhage gustav berkes manager of turner hall said last night that the wound was inflicted accidentally on thursday night during fencing practice by henry geilen of 1437 well street teacher of manual training in the lane techical high school berkes said the button came off geilen's foil just as he made a thrust which fichtner failed to parry geilen himself refused to be seen last night at his home the police are investi gating zimmerman's hello friend shows checks woman sued by banker declares he was infatuated with her new haven conn nov 21 checks amounting to several thousand dollars including transfer papers for a house which she claims he had given her were introduced in court to-day by mrs lillian wray formerly telephone operator who is being sued by martin zimmerman of nerr york a banker and uncle of the duchess of manchester who declares the money was a loan mrs wray declared that zimmerman who sne says had be come infatuated with her told her he would make his little hello friend in dependently rich paris clock beats heard in washington radio signals flashed across the atlantic washington nov 21 three weeks of patient experimenting culminated in success to-night when the united states naval observatory here heard the beats of the paris observatory clock as transmitted by radio signals from the eiffel tower to the great navy radio station at arlington the beats were compared with those of the washington clock for some minutes by the method of coincidences ballington booth balks reconciliation brother bramwell gets no answer to his letter new tork nov 21 reconciliation of general bramwell booth head of the salvation army and geueral ballington booth of the volunteers of america is uo nearer than before the former took a first step no acknowledgment came to general bramwell booth to-day from his brother the overture was with regard to the union of the two forces armours lose trade because of tariff washington nov 21 â€” protest against the loss of trade caused by the application of the new tariff bill was made to-day by attorney ralph crews of Chicago representing the armour packing company to the foreign trade advisers of the state department it was said the big packing company is suffering a heavy loss in export trade by reason of steps taken by several coun tries to shut out american meat on the ground that the duties provided in the new tariff bill show discrimination against certain of their products rees gets job where wife can go along washington nov 21 thomas ltees editor and owner of the springfield 111 register and former state senator was to-day appointed commissioner general to the countries bordering the mediterra nean in behalf of the panama exposi tion about a month ago mr rees was offered a similar assignment to south america but declined because the party was going on a war vessel and mrs rees could not accompany him mrs rees can go with him ou his mediterranean trip _._.__... hanish on trial to tell cure of violets prince of sun cult sits motion less in court for three hours while his lawyers battle over the acceptances of jurors high priest in high-priced book advises eating flowers and dew-drinking as cure for ills he has numerous titles by richard henry little prince otoman zar-adusht hanish high priest of the mazdaznan cult worshipers of the sun sat in a gloomy courtroom all day yesterday and watched the se lection of a jury that is going to try him ou the charge of sending obscene litera ture by express in violation of the inter state commerce laws prince otoman also styled the little master of the world and the prince of peace was accompanied by two or three of his followers many more spec tators including a half dozen women sat patiently in the courtroom all day the trial is being held before federal judge mack in the federal building no jurors were seeuried yesterday al though the government accepted twelve veniremen tentatively and tendered them to the defense which had not finished with the examination of the twelve when court adjourned spectators are curious prince otoman zar-adusht hanish sat like a rock all day although every eye in the courtroom was constantly upon him people came to the door tiptoed in whispered inquiries of their neighbors as to which of the men seated in the front of the room was hanish and then after feasting their eyes on the high priest of the sun worshipers departed hanish is not at all startling in ap pearance he looks like a man of about forty with a good head and an interest ing ut not unusual face he might be taken by one who did not know any thing about mazdaznan as a preac-cr or a lawyer or a book agent or an under taker he looks about forty although he says he is seventy it will be hard to make a woman believe that a person who seems to be about forty would wish to pass himself off as seventy many are worshipers but ah there is where the sun comes in and eating violets and dining on boiled dew many people believe in mazdaznan and gather behind hanish in his temple in lake park avenue and bow themselves to the floor and chant a weird refrain as the first rays of the sun peep mysteriously into the eastern windows merely because they want to look forty when they get to be seventy years old i don't blame them when pm seventy i would like to look forty myself or even twenty it's a wish the human heart has had since i-e first one ever beat hanish sits in the courtroom a rather handsome well-made man with a frame like that of an athlete and bearing every sign of a good sturdy health he ap parently doesn't know what it means to bave nerves he has what most of us lack very sadly power of concentration and control he can sit and regard the veniremen in the jury box for three hours at a stretch and not move once in all that time he doesn't even move his hands and he literally doesn't bat an es*e winker no matter what happens eats violets for age hanish says he gets his youthful looks his athletic appearance his interesting countenance and his perfect self-control through worshiping the sun and eat ing violets and early morning dew just how much can be brought forward at the trial of hanish of the weird rites and customs of mazdaznan is uncertain the government detectives made a care ful study of hanish and his cult for months before they arrested him the government is able to produce witnesses who can describe all the customs of the temple at lake avenue and has in its possession a great many of the books which hanish wrote and gave to his fol lowers â€” for a healthy cash consideration it is charged inner study the book which the gov ernment claims comes under the classi fication of obscene literature was sold to the adoring disciples of prince hanish for the modest price of 10 it is a book no bigger than one of george barr novels so there must he a comfortable profit in the transaction among other books now in the hands ot the government written by hanish is one dealing with the preservation of the health through simple means prince diary tells girl thief's life bares struggle to be good pitfalls laid for her ruin child writes of woman trying to make her become a white slave teils how she resisted but was led to steal by evil c o m p a n ions the diary of the girl who never had a chance is the heart story of thou sands of girls who come as innocent children to this country and have to maie their own way the story of my life as scrawled across the pages of an old blank book by hattle chabow ska now locked np as a thief narrates how she came here when she was four teen years old and how she had to work for her living of the temptations that be s e t he r â€” pitfalls that are set for every unsophisticated girl who has to reveals fight with men in auto who sought to lead her into evil escorts polite and she be lieved them kind until attacked shift for herself â€” and of bad compan ions who taught her to steal it is an intensely human document and it will probably win for her the chance for which she craves when she is ar raigned in the ju venile court to-day mrs gertrude howe britton of the ju venile protective as sociation has prom ised to find a good tome for hattie if pudge plnckney will her over to the association here is the rough draft halting but true of the story of her life hattie chabowska the story of my life by hattie chabowska i was fourteen years of age when i started to work for joe brown stein the buttonhole maker irene my sister took me to that shop for which i thank her very much , i have got four sisters the oldest one twenty-four years is married four years her name is martha ' she has got one baby boy two . years the second is irene she is nineteen years old she had one baby and it is dead she is not married the third is me i am seventeen years old and my name is hattie the fourth is klara she is fourteen years old it is seven months since my mother is dead and my father has gone away from us and we haven't seen him for five months i was working steady with my sister irene irene was so good to me and oh i was a happy little girl i didn't care for any fel lows i was so bashful but now oh why did my mother die why did she leave me here and when she was dying why didn't she take me with her she left me here in this bad world she don't see how i must suffer she don't see my tears how i wish i could he in my mother's place moved when mother died when my mother died irene nj self and klara we took the furniture and moved on holt avenue irene's friend katy she is four years from the old country she came and asked irene to take her to board irene did not want to because she knew that she was a bad girl that was wednesday evening she came by us and told that the people she was boarding with chased her away and one fellow slapped her face irene didn't want to take her yet but i felt so sorry for katy i was crying and told irene that she should take her irene took her poor katie she didn't even have a shirt so next morning irene gave her a shirt and a clean waist and 10 cents carfare out with young men then oue evening she took me out and met nice gentlemen they said good evening and were so good and talked so nice and then they took us home and made a date on sun day when sunday came we ware supposed to be on the corner at 8 o'clock my little sister klara was playing on the street when a young man was passing by and klara recognized katy's friend he asked klara for katy and clara took him upstairs by us we were eating supper katy was so glad that he came and they de cided to go out it was 2 o'clock in the morning when i came home my sister was sore at me that i stayed so long i was supposed to meet him wednes day but katy wouldn't let me go and every time he came she hide so i wouldn't talk to him i didn't see him for three months katy used to take me to balls picnics and shows oh my sister was so sore at me and on katy that she made a bum out of me both lose jobs . then katy told me that i should quit my job and go to work with her i quit my work and she got fired from her place and we both didn't work for two weeks then we start ed in candy factories sne didn't like them and by corsets she didn't like so we started in laundries we ' were working a few weeks she was so mean to me and was lighting with me so we quit from there and irene found her work in restaurants and i was doing housework for irene that was the same thing like be fore and once we were in bad trouble me and katy were coming from a theater when two fellows were com ing in an automobile and katy snapped her fingers and they stop and ask us to take a ride i didu't want to go but katy pulled me in - then they take us to a wineroom and then again we were riding so long and we came to an aw ful dark street and oh i never will forget what the fat man asked me but i was crying . and was begging katy to take me away but she was only laughing slapped man's face i never was strong like that night i slipped his face as hard as i could and i said to katy that if she want ed to she could stay with them but i'll go home and tell everything to irene she got scared and we went oh we were running and they after us then there was a policeman standing so they turned in another street katy told me i should not say nothing to irene and i promised her now it's a month since i am away from her from my sister irene katy went to a hotel and was stopping there and then came another a regu lar sportlug girl she was married and her husband is a first-class thief she robbed her husband three times and run away from him and i didn't know nothing about lt i thought she is a good woman and she told me her husband chased her and is very mean to her and she took me to a wine room and there again i b,ad to suf fer she was trying the worst way to make a sport from me but she had a poor chance i was crying and jumped through the window and run away the next day irene was so sore at me she almost hit me then rosie told me i should go away from irene 1 didn't want to go be cause i was feeling sorry that i must part with my mother's furniture that was thursday evening i came from work p here the first diary ends after that there are fragmentary notes telling how the girl went into homes as a domestic and began to steal in order to deck her self iu pretty things how she never had a fair chance and how the sin of her deeds oppressed her until she momentarily feared capture and here again is a blank as the detect ives arrested her before she could finish the entry in her diary mexican armies rushing to battle constitutionalists push south to meet federals on their way north expect to clash be tween juarez and chihuahua u s warns mexicans in tam pico-tuxpam district to protect american lives and property is ready to land marines special cabla to the examiner mexico mex nov 21 the bank of london and mexico received a message to-night from general villa at juarez in which he threat ens to execute the bank employes captured at torreon and durango if the bank does not honor his drafts the drafts are still held up el paso tex nov 21 the federals are coming north and villas men are being rushed south to meet them as fast as trains can be made up just how far north the federal forces are cannot be lamed but it is believed they are ap proaching villa ahumada and that villa hopes to occupy the bills and fortify the passes through which the lexkan ceo tral runs at los medanos before the federals get there all gambling houses iu juarez ware closed early to-night and at 10 o'clock all americans were quietlv warned ut seek safety in flight to el paso ready to meet federals in juarez it is admitted by constitu tionalist officers that they have knowl edge of a movement of a fore of fed erals from chihuahua northward li exact location of this force is not known but it is believed to be about half way between chihuahua and juarez the re ports which reached juarez were to the effect that there were 6,000 men in the federal column the constitutionalists insist that they will be prepared to meet and stop the federals at los medanos which is lo cated forty-three miles south of juarez they already have 2,000 men in that vicinity watching for any sodden ap proach of the federals and will rush 4,000 or 5,000 men to the front to-night or as fast as trains can be gotten to gether and on the road a tax of 50,000 in mexican money will be levied on the merchants of juarez by the constitutionalists in order to pay the expenses of the army in its fight against the huerta government the tax will be levied proportionately so that any merchant will not be required to pay more than he can afford on a basis of receipts and stock carried rush troops to ei paso for the first time since the united states troops have been stationed at kl paso during the mexican troubles all commissioned officers are required to at tend officers roll calls each morning the strick order was put into effect yes terday orders have also been given to all com missioned officers here that an officer muct remain wlch the troops at all times subject to immediate calling out of tha troops when an officer is on duty ha cannot leave the section where his troop is located for a single moment general villa seems to have his troopa well in hand and under exceleuc discip line all catinas are closed and there is no drunkenness troop k of the thirteenth cavalry u s a which had been stationed at norla >'. m was ordered to kl paso 1 this afternoon to strengthen the garrison i at the smelter ou the river north of the i city other troops are also to be called i ln it is said at headquarters but tha â„¢ orders for the movements had not been issued at 6 o'clock last night gen aguilar tells u s he'll protect the oil interests washington nov 21 rear ad miral fletcher who is on board the bat tleship rhode island at vera crui trans mttted to the navy department to-night the following dispatch received from general aguilar commander of the rebel operating in the vicinity of tuxpam i am governing Â«'â€¢ a constitutions basis my attitude being to guarantee the interests of ail foreign and domestic oil corporations existing in the territory i occupy fulfilling in tats moaner the de continued on 2d page 6th column continued on 4th page 7th column last saturday before thanksgiving phis is one of the year's big buying and selling days the â– *â€¢ man and woman and child who would be well dressed for thanksgiving day will buy overcoats suits hats shoes haber dashery millinery cloaks waists and lingerie to-day thurs day will be thanksgiving there will be thousands of family dinner parties and every one present wants to look well dressed there will be evening parties where the properly dressed will stand out distinctively in 170,000 Chicago homes this morning out of our daily circulation of 240,366 the decision will be made at the family breakfast table conference where to do to-day's buying we want our readers to read our ad vertising columns closely this morning and to be guided thereby the store offerings have been made with a view of selling for the thanksgiving trade there is a fine array of store news for all read what the merchants are advertising examiner's net paid circulation as sworn to the u s government daily 240,366 sunday 528,328 the examiner service bureau will co-operate with prospective advertis ers in making illustrations preparing copy and laying out a special holiday campaign a phone message to the advertising manager main 50uo will bring an expert